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Angela Epstein

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Angela Epstein,

Angela Epstein

Opinion

My mother’s singular aliyah

September 18, 2013 08:35
2 min read

It was, by all accounts, a “highly irregular” state of affairs. The business of assessing new Israeli immigrants, said the woman from the Interior Ministry, needed to be conducted from her office. Anyway, she had an aversion to hospitals.

But something clearly fluttered in this woman’s Jewish soul. And with only a little persuasion, she agreed to bend the rules.

Spool forward a couple of days and the needle-phobic bureaucrat could be found at my mother’s bedside at Jerusalem’s Hadassah Hospital, where, in heavily-accented English, she carried out the formalities of immigration.

“Betty, how are you? So you want to make aliyah? You sure nobody forced you to do zis?”

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